Page 1
The International Congress of Working-Men at Lausanne and the Peace
The SpectatorCongress at Geneva seem to have been singularly futile , and useless,—perhaps, almost as much so as the Pan-Anglican Synod of the week after next promises to be. The former...
The Geneva Congress has been still more incoherent. AsSem- bled
The Spectatorto promote universal peace, it seems to have been chiefly successful in eliciting speeches showing what needs destruction before peace can begin. Garibaldi, on arriving there on...
NEWS OF THE WEEK.
The SpectatorT HE week, so far as the United Kingdom can be said to have had one, has passed chiefly at Dundee, where the British Associa- tion has contrived a brisk succession of rather...
The King of Prussia met the first North German Parliament
The Spectatorsummoned under the new Federal Constitution on Tuesday last, and addressed it with remarkable reticence. Last week—on Thursday week—the Grand Duke of Baden, the most liberal of...
King William's speech to his first Federal Parliament was a
The Spectatormodel of reticence. He did not even glance at the appearance of foreign dictation. He did not so much as suggest that a time might come when the Main would cease to be even the...
Page 2
An amusing correspondence, the political meaning of which we have
The Spectatorelsewhere discussed, has been published this week, between President Johnson and General Grant, on the removal of General Sheridan. Mr. Johnson orders his removal, and asks...
Mr. Johnson has not only dismissed General Sheridan and General
The SpectatorSickles for their Radical policy, but has dismissed General Howard,—the Havelock of the American War, but a man of less stern and perhaps sweeter religious nature than Havelock,...
Who, except naturalists, had ever heard, before the meeting of
The Spectatorthe British Association on Tuesday, that British estates are in great danger of suffering seriously in value from the agency of voles? One accomplished man in our hearing,—no...
Encouraged by this admirable and success . ful paper, Sir John
The SpectatorLubbock's friends and admirers were unwise enough to hold a private meeting at Dundee to support his claims as candidate for the University of London,—only one elector of that...
The Archbishop of Canterbury—or some one else—has already sketched out
The Spectatorfor the Pan-Anglican Synod, which is to meet at Lam- beth on the 24th. 25th, and 2Gth of September, a programme of pro- ceedings. The first day the Bishop of Illinois is to...
Perhaps the most interesting paper of the Dundee meeting to
The Spectatorunscientific men was Sir John Lubbock's on the early condition of man, being intended to answer Archbishop Whately's argu- ment that no community ever did or could emerge...
There has been one strictly literary discussion in the British
The SpectatorAssociation on the genuineness of a correspondence which has been discovered or invented, or more probably first invented and then discovered, between Newton and Pascal, and...
Page 3
An English working-man--one of the many enabled by Mr. Hodgson's
The SpectatorPratt's thoughtful and benevolent plan to see the manu- factures of the Paris Exhibition critically, —sends to the Times of yesterday a report, which seems to us more able and...
Mr. W. E. Forster has been speaking to his constituents
The Spectatorat Bradford, on occasion of laying the first stone of the Tradesmen's Benevolent Association there. Of course it was not an oppor- tunity for a party speech, and Mr. Forster...
A very amusing letter in yesterday's Pall Mall, from "
The SpectatorA Lady of a Certain Age," describes a new dodge for getting timid women to buy " specifics," for effecting nothing, at an enormous cost. The lady went, according to her own...
We learn from the Dundee Adeertizer that the Anthropological 'Society,
The Spectatorwhich for some years back has been striving to make up for the absence of scientific names from its list of members by creating unscientific disturbances at meetings of the...
The President chosen for next year is one of the
The Spectatormost eminent of living botanists, Dr. Hooker, of Kew ; and Norwich is to be the place of meeting, Dr. Dalrymple urging its claims on the ground of its deep barbarism, which...
Lopez has given his explanation of the treachery with which
The Spectatorhe has been charged in betraying Maximilian to the Liberals. His assertion is, in effect, that the Emperor's casa was desperate ; that the Emperor had asked for a free pass for...
Ou Tuesday night there was a great Liberal Reform meeting
The Spectator.at Carlisle, where the speakers, Mr. Edmund Potter, Sir Wilfrid Lawson, &c., exhibited that not perhaps unnatural embarrassment which the Liberal party all over the kingdom...
The closing prices of the leading Foreign Securities yesterday and
The Spectatoron Friday week are subjoined:— Mexican Spanish Passives Do. Certificates Turkish 0 per Cents., 1853 .. 1862 .. United States 5 .20's • • Friday, Sept. 6. 151 194 151 so 69...
Yesterday and on Friday week the leading British Railways left
The Spectatoroff at the annexed quotations :— Great Eastern Great Northern • • ■■• 'Friday, Sept. 6. Friday, Sept. 13. .. 301 .. 301 — 113 ic. d... 112 Great Western.. .. • a •• .....
Considerable inactivity has prevailed in the market for all National
The SpectatorSecurities this week ; nevertheless, scarcely any change has taken place in the quotations. Yesterday, Consols for money left off at 941 1 ; ditto, for account, 911 ; Reduced...
Page 4
TOPICS OF THE DAY.
The SpectatorGENEVA AND LAMBETH. I F the white-surpliced and mitred ecclesiastics who are now flocking and fluttering softly, in groups of dove-like movement, towards Lambeth, would but...
Page 5
PRUSSIAN RETICENCE.
The SpectatorT HE Grand Dake of Baden's speech to his Parliament cer- tainly looks as if the time were coming when what we may now fairly call the Kingdom of North G,ermany would resemble a...
Page 6
WORKING-MEN IN PARLTAMFINT. T HERE has been much talk lately about
The Spectatorthe programme of the Liberal party. Statesmen, with more or less vague- ness, and journalists, with more or less dogmatism, have written on the subject. Everywhere we hear the...
Page 7
GENERAL GRANT AND MR. JOHNSON.
The Spectatorrw - E very remarkable correspondence published this week X between General Giant and President Johnson, on the subject of the President's order removing General Sheridan from...
Page 8
BAD J UDGES. T HE qualifications of a good Judge are
The Spectatorso high that we can- not be surprised at their rarity, and when we remember the way in which many Judges are selected, we can hardly complain that there are such flagrant...
Page 9
THE RITUALISTIC HUNGER. T HE evidence given before the Commission on
The SpectatorRitualism is very curious reading. It is impossible to conceive wider diver- gences and more random views, even amongst the most earnest adherents of private judgment, than the...
Page 10
THE DISH UNKNOWN ABROAD.
The SpectatorP ROFESSOR TIEFDENKEN, of Giessen, in his interesting Versuch zu einer Allgemeinen Theorie der Vergleichenden Kochkunst (Attempt at a Universal Theory of Comparative Cookery),...
Page 11
THE POPE'S LAST REVIEWER.
The SpectatorI F will not have escaped recollection how the great concert of Catholic symphony which Pius IX. gave himself so much trouble to get up in Rome this summer, was somewhat roughly...
Page 13
A RECENT CRITICISM ON MR. MAURICE.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR."] SIR,—I do not know whether you think it worth while to take any notice of what may be stated in the columns of the Record. Certainly, as a...
Page 14
A WIFE ON HER TRATELS.—II.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR."] Nauders, Tyrol, September 7, 1867. SIR, —Edward is growing a beard. I am sure he wouldn't have done this at Margate, and it is one of the...
THE CREED OF THE NATIONAL CHURCH. [To THE EDITOR OF
The SpectatorTHE " SPECTATOR."] Sin,—To answer, as you do to " W. T.'s " letter in your number of September 7, that " there is no bigotry in assuming a practical centre for a Church's...
Page 16
li OOKS.
The SpectatorMARGARET'S ENGAGEMENT.* THERE is a good deal of vivacity and some skill in this story, but why is it that it is so difficult to draw cheerful and saintly old ladies, with their...
Page 17
MR. BLACKBURN'S PYRENEES.*
The SpectatorTHIS is a more ambitious volume than Mr. Blackburn's Notes on Spain. The octavo is larger and more imposing, the title-page, a model of elegance, is not content with black type,...
Page 18
THE SECOND MARQUIS OF WORCESTER.*
The SpectatorTHE production of this bulky volume is no common achievement. Mr. Dircks has undertaken to write the life of a man about whom the public know very little, and even his...
Page 19
THE LIFE AND SPEECHES OF LORD PLUNKET.*
The Spectator[FIRST NOTICE.] THE history of Ireland has yet to be written, not what may be called the prehistoric history of that unhappy land, but the I ' The Ltfe, Letters, and Speech's of...
Page 20
STUDIES IN CONDUCT.*
The SpectatorA suorrr change in this title would remove all those objections to its appropriateness and acv uracy of description which are modestly hinted at in the author's prefatory note....
Page 22
On the Boulevards; together with Trips to Normandy and Brittany.
The SpectatorBy W. Blanchard Jerrold. 2 vols. (W. H. Allen and Co.)—It is much to be regretted that Mr. Jerrold has prefaced his valuable and interest- ing sketches of Normandy and Brittany...
A Manual of Marine Insurance. By Manley Hopkins. (Smith and
The SpectatorElder.)—This work is practical and clearly written, and contains a great deal of information both on the present state of our law as to marine insurance, the state of the French...
Macmillan's Magazine. September. (Macmillan.)—As this maga- zine escaped us last
The Spectatorweek, we mast mention it separately. One of its most notable features is the conclusion of Mr. Henry Kingsley's wild story, " Silcote of Silcotes." Mrs. Norton's " Old Sir...
The Fortnightly Review. September. (Chapman and Hall.)—Two or three papers
The Spectatorin this number deserve a calmer study and a more lengthened consideration than we have been able to give them. Such are the articles on "The Authenticity of the Works of Plato,"...
this pleasing volume to the memory of Mrs. Browning, and
The Spectatoramong the contents are two sonnets to the same person, one dated in 1851 and the other in 1861. And there is much propriety in this dedication, for though Miss Greeuwell's poems...
CURRENT LITE RAT UR E.
The SpectatorThe Contemporary Review. September. (Strahan.)—This is an un- usually good number, and the papers it contains are equally attractive in their subjects and meritorious in their...
Page 23
Circe. By Babington White. 2 vols. (Ward, Lock, and Tyler.)-
The SpectatorWe conclude that Circe is Mr. White's first attempt as a writer of fiction. It is a curious specimen of the inflated, grandiloquent kind of composition which very young authors...
0 - Kee - Pa, a Religious Ceremony ; and other Customs of the
The SpectatorMandan. By George Catlin. (Triibner.)-One of the reasons for republishing this strange and sickening account of superstitious barbarity is that doubts have been thrown on its...